Page 8-Sunday, February 5, 1978-The Michigan Daily WOES CONTINUE IN 5-1 SETBACK Irish freeze Blue icers ERROL SHIFMAN ByI If you studied or partied last night between the hours of 7:30 and 10:00 you did not miss anything at Yost Ice Arena. The Michigan hockey team con- tinued downward on its treadmill, losing to Notre Dame, 5-1. For the sixth straight weekend it was a combination of no offense and no defense spelling the Wolverines' down- fall. It took the Fighting Irish two and a half periods however to show that they were any better. WITH THE score deadlocked 1-1,. Irish defenseman Dan Byers broke the game open, scoring two goals within 24 seconds and that was all they needed. Byers' first goal came at 14:58 while the Blue defense posed for a picture and each team was a man short. On his next shot, Byers-put in a deflection off a . point shot and the Irish led 3-1 last 15:22 and the period ended just that way. Michigan had tied the game 1-1 at the 13 minute mark of the second period g when freshman center Gordie Hamp- son stole the puck from Irish defen- seman Jeff Brownschidle at the red line and skated in all alone on Notre Dame r goalie Jeff Peterson. Hampson lifted 5' the puck high into the right corner of the net and the crowd at Yost erupted. That was the last anyone heard of the 9 crowd. 2 The Wolverines started the game slowly and it took them over four minutes to get any kind of shot off in the first period. Michigan's listless play V brought boos from the 5203 diehard fans : but that failed to illicit any response d from their team. THE PENALTY filled period saw F: only one goal, coming on M' goalie Rick Palmer's only real lapse of the game. Palmer got caught wandering out between the circles and Irishman Steve Schneider snuck in behind Palmer and fired the puck into an open net. The tallie came with Michigan for- ward Kip Maurer in the penalty box for holding. Palmer stopped many close-in chan- ces throughout the game and stopped 33 enemy shots. Palmer's teammates could only mange 25 on Notre Dame netminder Peterson. Peterson played a brilliant game and earned second star honors for his per- formance. He foiled all the Michigan Blue bounced FIRST PERIOD Scoring: 1. ND-Schneider (Byers, Meredith) 15:43. Penalties: M-Maurer (tripping) 0:55; ND-Nu- gent (hooking) 1:07; M-Turner (boarding) 2:19; ND-Meredith (tripping) 3:25; NUD-Bench (served by Friedmann) 4:26; ND-Baumgartner (tripping) 7:54; M-Kawa (hooking) 11:45; M-Maurer (hold- ing) 14:33; M-Lerg (boarding) 17:30. SECOND PERIOD Scoring: 2. M-Hampson (unassisted) 13:00; 3. ND -Byers (Cameron, Collier) 14:58; 4. ND-Byers (Cameron, Collier) 15:22. Penalties: ND-Brownschidle (high sticking) 2:08; ND-Michelek (tripping) 8:23; M-Thayer (high sticking) 13:53; ND-Humphreys (high stick- ing) 13:53; ND-Howe (high sticking) 16:53. THIRD PERIOD Scoring: 5. ND-Humphreys (Michalek, Camer- on) 12:54; 6. ND-Jackson (unassisted) 16:44. Penalties: ND-Brownschidle (hooking) 1:35; ND -Howe (interference) 7:19; M-Todd (tripping) 16:26; ND-Meredith (interference) 19:44. SAVES comeback attempts in the third period while his team was putting the game out of reach. NOTRE DAME center Kevin Hum- phreys led a three-on-two break in on Palmer and as the two Blue defenders split to take the wings, Humphreys, waltzed right in and scored. The goal, Notre Dame's fourth, sent the Michigan followers heading to the exits. Defense- man Don Jackson ended the scoring on an unassisted goal, a power play, at 16:44. Michigan had eight power play at- tempts in the contest and did not click on one. Most of the time, the Wolverines were hard pressed to even get a shot off. The Wolverines have now dropped 11 of their last 12 conference contests and find themselves only two points ahead of sixth place Colorado College. Palmer (M) .................... 16 Peterson (ND)..6 6 10 11 9 33 25 MSU keeps Big Ten lead; comeback foils Hoosiers By The Associated Press EAST LANSING - Michigan State outscored Indiana 22-5 over a 10- minute stretch in the second half last night and charged from behind to grab a 68-59 Big Ten basketball vic- tory over the Hoosiers and retain a share of the conference lead. Down by 11 points,,- the biggest margin of the game, the Spartans were sparked by their bench as they turned a 45-34 deficit into a 56-50 lead with seven minutes to play. Michigan State got key baskets from game scoring leader Greg Kelser, who had 21 overall. The Hoosiers were led by Mike Woodson who had 20 points. Buckeyes belt Illini COLUMBUS - Ohio State, led by freshman Ken Page's 18 points, scored 12 straight points late in the second half to defeat Illinois 70-65 for the second time in six days last night. Ohio State used a balanced attack to match Illinois' 5-5 league record. Ohio State is 12-7 overall and the Illini 11-8. Herb Williams, Ohio State's 6-foot- 11 freshman center, contributed 17 points and Kelvin Ransey added 16. Mark Smith, a 6-7 freshman, came off the bench to lead Illinois with 17 points. Badgers bounce Iowa MADISON - Wisconsin's zone defense neutralized Iowa's top scor- Tankers shine despite loss ers while Arnold Gaines poured in 25 points to lead the Badgers to an 82-72 upset of Iowa yesterday. Wildcats succumb MINNEAPOLIS - Osborne Lock- hart rifled in 25 points and confer- ence scoring leader Mychal Thomp- son added 23 as Minnesota downed stubborn Northwestern 80-69 last night. The victory, coupled with Michi- gan's loss at Purdue, moved Minne- sota into sole possession of second place behind the Boilermakers and Michigan State.- The Gophers, 7-3, led only 33-27 at halftime, but scored 10 of the first 14 points in the second half to open a 43-31 cushion. Minnesota led by 10 or 12 points most of the second half. big ten standings full court l 11e PRESS Wolverines a winner ... . . when it comes to effort By DAVE RENBARGER Special to The Daily WEST LAFAYETTE Roll over and play dead? Not this Michigan team. Not on your life. That certainly would have been the easiest thing for the Wolverines to do yesterday amidst the controlled bedlam that was Purdue's Mackey Arena. But they refused toqdo so, nearly erasing an early 26-point deficit while giv- ing the league-leading Boilermakers about as much as they could handle. The final score was 75-66. Up against an inspired Purdue quintet and 14,123 screaming fans who threatened to dislocate the building from its foundation, the Wolverines never should have bothered coming out of their locker room. After missing their first seven shots, Michigan was awarded two points on a goaltending call five minutes into the game to get on the scoreboard. It took them a good eight and a half minutes to reach double figures, and, over fifteen minutes into the game, the Wolverines found themselves on the short end of a 38-12 score. Time to hang up the old sneakers, go through the motions, and vacate the premises. Right? Wrong. At a point when other teams might have called it an afternoon, Michigan showed the capacity crowd as well as the fans tuned in on television what it is made of, mounting a comeback that put some excitement in what was shaping up to be a romp. Over a sixteen and a half minute period crossing the halftime inter- mission, the Wolverines outscored Purdue 41-20 to pull within five. "I can't say anything bad about our kids," said Coach Johnny Orr after the game. "We made a great comeback, doggone it. There was enough time left that we could have won the game ... I'm very proud of this team." The critical plays that stunted the comeback came with 7:27 left in the game when Tommy Staton drew his fifth foul. Although the Wolverines managed.to stay close a while longer, they had lost the man who again provided the impetus for the comeback. "Staton played great in the second half," said Orr. "He was tremendous and gave us the momentum." On defense the junior guard, who was shifted to his old forward slot yesterday, prevented the Boilermakers from running their inside game like they did earlier. Staton came up with another clutch performance, forcing several key turnovers to ignite Michigan's smoldering fast break. In the somber Michigan locker room Staton mentioned some remarks made by some of Purdue's players, in explanation of his inspired second half play. "They came into the locker room at the half saying that they were going to blow us out, but later on we had them fighting for their lives." But Michigan finally ran out of horses, losing Joel Thompson on fouls with just under seven minutes left. Leading 68-62 with 3:27 left, Purdue went into its four-corner offense and, as one Boilermaker after another paraded to the foul line, the outcome became apparent. The most impressive element of Michigan's aborted comeback had to be the circumstances under which it was mounted. The noise level in the arena was deafening and sustained throughout the game. The Wolverines had a hard time even hearing themselves dribble, much less hearing instructions from the bench. Purdue coach Fred Schaus did not fail to give the Boilermaker backers partial credit for the victory. "The crowd," he acknowledged after tle game, "You need that little something when you're so tired that you can't put one foot in front of the other, they helped." If Schaus's squad was that tired yesterday, then Orr's Wolverines had no business even being on the court, since they have been on the road for four days. But Johnny 0. had no excuses. "Purdue is a fine team," he said. "I think that there's no doubt that they're the best team (in the conference)." But Orr's boys aren't ready to concede a thing to Purdue, even after suf- fering their second defeat in six days. "They're a good team," said Alan Hardy. "But I know we could beat 'em. It's just a matter of getting a few breaks." Staton was asked if he thought Purdue was the better team. His reply: "No way, man. Not at all ... and we lost no pride today." SANS SOUCI large furnished 1 and 2 bed- room apartments available for fall occupancy Located across from U of M stadium Bus Service every 15 minutes from Hoover St. to State St. call 995-3955 visit resident manager at apartment K-1 I Ski Down or t~ :' ~'i7Q~ Jv to Hoosiers Special to The Daily Michigan's men's swimming team put in a competitive showing yes- terday in Bloomington against a very strong Indiana team. The Hoosiers, however, walked away with a 69-46 Svictory overnhe Wolverines. Indiana was awesome, but we still had some outstanding perform- ances," said Wolverine coach Gus Stager. FERNANDO Canales led the Blue tankers with two individual first place finishes while anchoring the 400-yard freestyle relay which fin- ished first with a time of 3:07.05. Canales's other two firsts were in the 200-yard freestyle and the 100-yard freestyle. Diver Matt Chelich took first place in both the one-meter and three- meter diving events. I. W Michigan State ..... 8 Purdue ............. 8 Minnesota.........7 MICHIGAN ........ 6 Illinois ............. 5 Ohio State.........5 Indiana .......... 4 Iowa ............3 Northwestern.....2 Wisconsin........2 L 2 2 3 4 5 5 6 7 8 8 Pct. .800 .800 .700 .600 .500 .500 .40l .300- .200 .200 Yesterdays results Purdue 75, MICHIGAN 66 Michigan State 68, Indiana 59 Ohio State 70, Illinois 65 Wisconsin 82, Iowa 72 Minnesota 80, Northwestern 69 Thursday's games Ohio State at MICHIGAN Illinois at Northwestern Michigan State at Iowa Wisconsin at Minnesota Purdue at Indiana GB l 2 3 3; 4 5 6 6 but get down to the SUPER SALE at FIRST DOWN * Colorado Comfort 3-layer Down Parka with 60-40 shell and down filled hood. Reg. $95 Now 74.95 ' 50% off ALL SKI JACKETS MEN'S AND WOMEN'S STYLES by Beconta, Gerry, Rosse, Number One Sun and Obermeyer . Ladies 2-piece SKI SUITS by Obermeyer Reg. $134 Now $74.95 $ 5 off any Down- Filled Colorado Comfort Vest - SYMPOSIUM ON HUMAN RIGHTS, IN THE USSR AND EASTERN EUROPE FEB. 5-710, 1978 Public is invited. Free admission. I 1 " 50% off all Junior Sizes PARKAS, JACKETS AND SWEATERS * Kombi SKI MITTS and GLOVES Reg. $14 to $36 Now $9.95 to $27.95 " 50 % off every SKI SWEATER IN STOCK-men's & women's * Colorado Comfort Down-Filled, SKI JACKETS Reg. $60 Now $39.95 " Save also on THERMAL UNDER- WEAR, TURTLE - NECKS, SKI CAPS .nA murk M..iirhmn-ro SCORES College Basketball Kansas 69, Oklahoma 68 Kentucky 88. Florida 61 Notre Dame 100, Davidson 76 Louisville 83, Cincinnati 76 Maryland 81, Nevada.Las Vegas 68 Wake Forest 74, Virginia 62 Texas 87, Texas Christian 60 Providence 79, Rhode Island 54 Creighton 86, Bradley 74 Detroit 80, Xavier, Ohio 74 Kent State 55, Miami (Oh.) 54 Ohio U. 72, Toledo 71 Men's Swimming Indiana 69, MICHIGAN 46 Women's Swimming MICHIGAN 104, Princeton 27 MICHIGAN 114, Penn State 17 Women's Gymnastics Kent State 138.1, MICHIGAN 133.75 Pro Hockey Detroit 2, Toronto 2 Philadelphia2, Cleveland2 University of Michigan Elect asa MINI-COURSE University Course No. 418 * * * * Register by 21578 oCRISP Mini-course info:.764-6830. SUNDAY, FEB. S DISSENT IN THE USSR 7:30 pm Prof. Roman Szporluk-History, U of M 8:00 pm Efrem Yankelevich-son-in-low of Soviet scientist Andrei Sokhorov valentin Turchin-mathematicion, former member Moscow Amnesty International MONDAY, FEB. 6 FREEDOM OF INFORMATION 12:00 noon Totyona Yonkelevich-step-daughter of Soviet scientist Andrei Sokharov 4:00 pm Jon Nowok-formerly of Radio O pm Prof. Jon Gross-Sociology, Yale Univ. n A p--umI-la 1AW ..... _f--.ur r Mncrr 8:30 pm LudiloAekseyevo-former member Mosc r Helsinki Monitoring Group TUESDAY, FEB. 7 FREEDOM OF RELIGIOUS i NATIONA 4:00 pm Peter Vcko-Chairman, Mich. District, Czechoslovak Nat'l Council of America 730 pm Uldis Sipols-Post Pres., American LatvianY Assoc. 8:30 pm Rabbi Arnold Turetsky-Temple Israel Cent White Plains, NY WEDNESDAY, FEB. 8 FREEDOM OF RELIGIOUS i NATIO 12:00 noon Ludmillo Alekseyeva-formeOr member Moscow Helsinki Monitoring Group 4:00 pm Prof. Joseph Mikus-Georgetown Univ., And Slovak Panel. 7:30 pm Prof. Zvi Gitelmn-Political Sci, U of M 8:30 pm Andrew elre Cnereneainion witness at the-.egde conference TNURSDAY, FEB. 9 FREEDOM OF INTELLECT 12:00 noon Vladimir Frumkin-Oberlin Collep. video taped concert-lecture 7;30 pm Andrei Svetkoff-fornr Soviet undorgrou poet 8:30 pm Harry Derderion-Pros, Dot. Chapter, Armenian Revolutionary Federation .. FRIDAY, FIB. 10 HUMAN RIGHTS: VIOLATIONS, ACTIV } . 7OPPOSITION ABROAD 2;00 pm Congressman Abner Mikva b .t ne MtB Aud 4 MLB Aud 4 Rackham West Lecture Room Free Europe Rockham Amphi. Rackham Amphi. Rackhom Anmphi. IDENTITY Rackhom Amphi. Youth RackhamAmphi. or, Rockhom Amphi. SAL IDENTITY Rackhm West Lecture Room Rackham Amphi. Rackhom Amphi. Rackham Amphi. Rackham West Lecture Room d RockhamAmphi. Rackhom Amphi. ISM, & Rackham Lecture Hall S I' m